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Friday, 30 May 2014 from 17:00 to 18:30 (BST)

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Event Details

The Institute of Advanced Studies (IAS) at Birmingham is delighted to announce a public lecture on the ethics of humanitarian intervention by Jeff McMahan (Rutgers), to be held on 30th May, at 5pm in the Barber Institute of Fine Arts.

Professor McMahan, Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the IAS, is one of the most celebrated and influential philosophers writing on the ethics of war today. He is well known for a style that combines great philosophical rigour and innovativeness with great clarity and accessibility to non-specialists. His public lecture, for which a synopsis is included below, is recommended for anyone interested in the ethics of war and intervention generally, or in thinking about some of the biggest current and recent issues in international affairs from a moral point of view.

Tickets for this event are free, but registration is required (via this page), and early registration highly recommended.

Lecture synopsis: Many on the political left view virtually all exercises of military force with suspicion - even those for which there might be a humanitarian justification. Others deplore the unwillingness of powerful states to intervene in such conflicts as those in Rwanda, Sudan, and Syria, when intervention could arguably save tens or hundreds of thousands of lives. Many on the political right think that no instance of humanitarian intervention can be a justifiable use of a state's resources unless it can be shown to be in that state's interest. In his lecture, McMahan will address these different views and consider when humanitarian intervention might be permissible and when it might even be morally required.

Jeff McMahan is Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University, New York. He is the author of The Ethics of Killing: Problems at the Margins of Life (Oxford University Press, 2002) and Killing in War (Oxford University Press, 2009). He has several other books forthcoming from Oxford University Press, including a collection of essays called The Values of Lives, a book on war intended for both academic and non-academic readers called The Right Way to Fight, and a sequel to his 2002 book called The Ethics of Killing: Self-Defense, War, and Punishment.